“discovery consists of looking at · how have we done 76% unemployment ... evening cold and gray,...
TRANSCRIPT
“Discovery consists of looking at
the same thing as everyone else
and thinking something different.”
A.Szent-Gyorgyi
What Do People Want?
To be Healthy, Happy, and Safe
Meaningful Day Activities (Interesting things
to do)
To Live in their Own Home (Housing)
To Be Able to Get Around (Transportation)
Friends and relationships (Social Capital)
How Have We Done
76% unemployment or underemployment
Only 6.1% own their own home (69% norm)
Public Transportation cuts and limitations
Friendship voids and social isolation
Vulnerable people at greater risk of violence
Only 32% report being “very satisfied”
Limitations in civic engagement
Increased morbidity (10 to 12 years sooner)
Why Haven’t We Done Better?
How Can We Do Better?
We Use A
Flawed
Paradigm
Paradigms
A paradigm is a set of rules and regulations that:
1) Defines boundaries
2) Tells you what to do to be successful within those boundaries
Adapted from Joel Barker
Micro Paradigm
Looks at deficits, deficiencies, weakness
Separates and congregates
Relies on Experts to make decisions
Attempts to fix the person
Detailed Micro Paradigm
The person is the problem
The problem is in the person
The person is labeled
The label leads to separation
The experts do an assessment
The person gets a treatment plan
The program attempts to fix the problem
Difference Model leads to:
Identifies and highlights the difference
The difference is identified in stereotypes
The stereotypes separates the person
The person is then avoided/stigmatized
Effects of Difference
Person is Misunderstood
Person is Avoided
Person is Not Welcomed
Person is Banned
Person is Banished
Person is Isolated and at greater risk
Person Dies Sooner
Results of Treatment Model
Separate programs
Segregated residential settings
Limited work opportunities
Sheltered Workshops or menial work
Segregated Day Programs
Limited Relationships, except with others w/vulnerabilities
Separate recreational programs
IS THIS AS GOOD AS IT GETS?
“Destiny is not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice”
~W.J. Bryan
The Magic Wand
If you could wish for 3 things for yourself or
someone you love, what would they be?
Quality of Life Indicators
Healthfulness
Happiness
Longevity
Research Shows
Healthfulness
Happiness
Longevity
ARE ALL TIED TO SOCIAL CAPITAL
What is Social Capital?
The value, benefits, and resources made
available, and accessed, through our
relationships and social networks. Three key
values of Social Capital are:
1. Instrumental
2. Emotional
3. Informational
Research Also Shows
Social Capital is related to:
People getting jobs
People finding others to live with
People finding rides/transportation
People being more tolerant, respectful, kind,
helpful and the like
People being safer
Increased pro-social behaviors
Simply Stated
The quantity and quality of your relationships is
important. The more social capital you have,
the healthier you are, the happier you are, the
more you achieve, the longer you live, and the
better the outcomes are in your life.
“To think is to differ”
~C. Darrow
Investing in Social Capital
We need to stop thinking clinically and focus our attention on the community
We must understand how community operates
We must find ways to reverse institutionalization and micro treatment models
We must listen to people and allow them to decide
We must help people build social capital
“Social problems stem not from individual
differences or deficits, but from the failure of
society to meet the needs of all its members”
L. Gutierez
Community
Community is a network of different people
who come together on a regular basis for some
common cause or celebration
Key Ingredients of Community are:
Commonality
Difference
Regularity
Similarities vs. Differences
When people first meet they are drawn by their
similarities, but differences can (and do) push us
apart. What mitigates this struggle are two
critical ingredients:
Regularity/Frequency of exchange
More Similarity that people find
Indentifying Social Capital
Think about the relationships and connections
one already has
Identify the clusters of relationships (i.e. church,
school, work, clubs, etc) that might apply
Social Network Analysis – The Sociogram
People you see and know
People you know and do things with
People you love & care deeply for
Sociogram
Building Social Capital
Identify key areas of interest/affinity
Find a matching group or community
Understand the community’s culture
Find a gatekeeper
The Gatekeeper
Someone already in the community who has
some influence or authority over the other
members. They can have formal or informal
influence, and can affect how people react to
new things in either positive or negative ways.
Research on Gatekeepers
They tend to be positive people
They reach out to people
They are willing to take risks
They are usually flexible
Often they are right brain thinkers
More often than naught they are female
Magic of Community
When Similarities Override Differences
He who would be a leader, let him first become
a bridge.
The Bridgebuilder
An old man going a lone highway, came at the
evening cold and gray, to a chasm vast deep and
wide; the old man crossed in the twilight dim,
the sullen stream held no fear for him, but he
turned when safe on the other side and built a
bridge to span the tide.
“Old man” said a fellow pilgrim near, “you are
wasting your time with building here, you never
again will pass this way, your journey will end
with the close of the day, you have crossed the
chasm deep and wide, why build you this bridge
at even tide.”
The builder lifted his old gray head. “Good
friend, in the way that I’ve come,” he said.
“There follows after me this day, a youth whose
feet must pass this way. This stream which has
been nothing to me, to the fair haired youth
might a pitfall be. Yes he too must cross in the
twilight dim; Good friend, I am building this
bridge – for him.”
“We must become the change we wish to create.”
Gandhi
“In a new sense, all life is interrelated. All
persons are caught up in an inescapable network
of mutuality, tied to a single garment of destiny.
Whatever affects one directly, affects all
indirectly. I can never be what I ought to be,
and you can never be what you ought to be,
until I am what I ought to be. This is the
interrelated structure of reality.”
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Al Condeluci, PhD.
1400 South Braddock Ave.
Pittsburgh, PA 15218
412-683-7100 x 2122
412-683-4160 fax
www.alcondeluci.com
@acondeluci on Twitter